Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't

Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't


Media:Hardcover
Author:Jim Collins
Publisher:Collins
Release date:16 October, 2001
List price:$27.50
Our price:$16.74 that is 39% off!

Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't

Average rating:
GOOD TO GREAT: BOARDOPTIONS.COM PERSPECTIVE
Twenty-one researchers looked for public companies with the following patters: Fortune 500 Companies with fifteen-year cumulative stock returns at or below the general stock market, a transition period followed by cumulative returns at least three times the general market over the next fifteen years.

Eleven companies were identified and compared to similar companies within industry that had not transitioned from good to great. For example, Abbott was compared with Upjohn; Circuit City with Silo; Gillette with Warner-Lambert, Kroger with A&P, etc.

The project involved coding 6,000 articles, 2,000 pages of interview transcripts, and 384Million bytes of computer data.

What was learned?

Since THE key role of the Board of the hiring and firing of the CEO, we will focus on this area only. But the book has lots of strategic implications for Board members and senior executives beyond CEO recruiting.

Boards of public companies often assume that salvation can be achieved by hiring a well-known, charismatic CEO from outside the company. In a world of supply & demand, Boards ask shareholders to pay dearly for such rare talent. Are the results worth it?

According to Collins and his team, such charismatic leaders are NEGATIVELY associated with good to great companies.

Ten of the eleven good to great CEOs came from within the company. Good to great CEOs are self-effacing, even shy. They have a blend of personal humility combined with fierce determination for the organization as a whole. Boards of Directors are looking for Julius Caesar when they should be looking for Abraham Lincoln.

The research-based nature of this effort takes the book out of the ordinary category of "pop" management books. It is a book to read, digest, and re-read.

Larry Stybel & Maryanne Peabody

Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't -
Intriguing Look Into Reasons For Success
I found great information and inspiration in Jim Collins' bestselling book, "Good To Great". This is a book that anyone who is ambitious and interested in success should read. I don't think that leaves many people out! Several reviewers have also mentioned Norman Thomas Remick's book, "West Point: Character Leadership..." as a great follow-on to "Good To Great". I have now read it and can subscribe to its being an intriguing look into the more basic reasons for success. I am now recommending both books to everyone in the world who makes enquires to our consulting firm.
- Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't
Brings Einstein kind of clarity to business management
In this book, Collins mentions about how, before Einstein, two other eminent scientists wrote down a formally equivalent theory to Einstein's theory of Special Relativity, but it was not until Einstein's piercing insight simplified the theory to some basic postulates, did scientists appreciate the truth. For people who were trying to build a solid business and get it on the path to greatness, the spectacular growth (atleast in market value) of companies during the Internet boom years did not ring true, but who would listen, least of all the hundreds of VCs fueling this exuberance. In contrast, the insights gained by Collins and his team, from over 15,000 hours of well-directed research done over five years, will ring true to anybody who is going through the process of building a great company through deliberate steps without being swayed by the most current management fad or the hottest unrelated market opportunity.

The "Hedgehog Concept" and the "Flywheel" findings explained in the book reiterate that, achieving true greatness is not simply a matter of capitalizing on being in the right place at the right time, but it is achieved through well thought out, focused, and sustained work. And in a highly competitive world, companies that want to stand out from the crowd need to get the best people on board first.

While these findings seem like self-evident truths, during times of trouble, companies almost always feel like they do not have time for such "idealistic" approaches. What this book does, is provide the right ideas to enable good companies to move towards greatness before getting into crisis. Collins great presentation of these findings, borne out of research on the present day good-to-great companies, brings a kind of clarity and understanding that will act like fresh fuel for companies on their way to greatness.

Top Book products
Real Buy

Similar products
Built to Last : Successful Habits of Visionary Companies (Harper Business Essentials)
Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done
First, Break All the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently
The Tipping Point : How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference

Association For Textual Scholarship In Art History Membership
Samsung Cigarette Lighter Adapter for Samsung I300/I330 Series Phone
No End Save Victory: Perspectives on World War II
Trading with the Enemy: Seduction and Betrayal on Jim Cramer's Wall Street
Pfaltzgraff Melissa Vegetable/Serve Bowl